Last Night in Brooklyn by Xochitl Gonzalez

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Last Night in Brooklyn by Xochitl Gonzalez

Contemporary fiction

Last Night in Brooklyn

Early Release

by Xochitl Gonzalez

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Quick take

Welcome to 2000s Brooklyn: dreams are big, apartments are small, and one chic neighbor can show you a whole new world.

Early Release

Read it before it hits other bookstores on April 21st.

Good to know

  • Illustrated icon, Female_Friendship

    Female friendships

  • Illustrated icon, NYC

    NYC

  • Illustrated icon, Infidelity

    Infidelity

  • Illustrated icon, 2000s

    2000s

Synopsis

Spring, 2007

At twenty-six, Alicia Canales Forten feels smothered by her future. She’s in a long-distance relationship, living at home with her mother’s beliefs, saving up for her wedding to a future doctor. But after Alicia ventures out one night in the neighborhood of Fort Greene, Brooklyn, she finds herself lured by the siren song of youth and possibility that the striving crowd of creatives holds, and moves in.

No one embodies this milieu more than La Garza, a larger-than-life, up-and-coming fashion designer whose epic house parties fuel neighborhood lore. La Garza’s life, observed by Alicia from her apartment across the street, seems to hold the allure and fearlessness Alicia has never dared to imagine for herself.

But when Alicia’s wealthy banker cousin moves to the neighborhood, she finds herself increasingly drawn into both his and La Garza’s precarious lives.

Against the backdrop of a potentially life-changing presidential election and a looming once-in-a-generation fiscal crisis, Last Night in Brooklyn explores the dark compromise of the American Dream for people of color living, unknowingly, in the twilight of a cultural moment. It is a story about everything money can buy―and the destruction of what it can’t.

Read a sample

Get an early look from the first pages of Last Night in Brooklyn.

Last Night in Brooklyn

One

The messages began arriving early—as the regulars went streaming out into the breaking dawn—announcing that this day would mark a last in Brooklyn. The version we knew, anyway. “Come,” they all said, “to Freddy’s. Tonight. Come to say goodbye.” There was, they reasoned, nothing left for them to do. These homies had tried it all. Fought the good fight. Employed means ranging from sane and democratic to borderline domestic terrorism. They’d petitioned. They’d rallied. They’d deployed celebrities. Enlisted politicians. They’d chained themselves to brass bar rails for days at a time; strapped themselves to bulldozers. A few tried to gunk up the gears in a cement mixer; others had sent the developers threats. Some, it was said—the spiritual among them—had gone days without food or drink.

People, on the outside, thought it was a little daft. So much hubbub over a bar. But we, on the inside, knew it was so much more than that. Even those of us who barely went to Freddy’s in the first place.

It was about who gets to decide something is valuable and something else worthless. It was as much about how the shots get called as it was about the shots themselves. (Everybody in Brooklyn—our kind of Brooklyn—believed in a fair fucking fight. But this, we all knew, had been dirty pool.) It was because one day it’s Freddy’s— some other guy’s watering hole—and the next day it could be yours. Or your house. Or your block. Or the neighborhood you’d always called home. Taken. Without one word of your say in the matter. Because suddenly, what you had—what you cherished and loved that had been shat on and forgotten by everybody? Well, suddenly, it has value. It is deemed nice. And apparently, it was decreed—by those unknown kings appointed to discern such things—that we didn’t deserve nice things.

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Other books by Xochitl Gonzalez

April add-ons
This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me
The Ending Writes Itself
Into the Blue
A Good Person
Nothing Tastes as Good
Last Night in Brooklyn
The Paris Match
The Book Witch
April add-ons
View all
This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me
The Ending Writes Itself
Into the Blue
A Good Person
Nothing Tastes as Good
Last Night in Brooklyn
The Paris Match
The Book Witch